A Coruña by Sinaldaba Estudio de Arquitectura

Long wooden panels give a shed-like aesthetic to the walls and cabinets of this apartment in A Coruña, Spain, by Sinaldaba Estudio de Arquitectura.

A Coruna by Sinaldaba

Spanish studio Sinaldaba Estudio de Arquitectura adapted the narrow, confined layout of the apartment to create a single, open-plan living space at one end and a bedroom at the other.

A Coruna by Sinaldaba

Working with a limited budget, the architects used recycled materials to construct partitions between rooms, as well as to build worktops and cabinets for the kitchen.

A Coruna by Sinaldaba

White tiles were stripped from the kitchen worktop and replaced with a stainless steel surface and sink.

A Coruna by Sinaldaba

Rugged stone walls were painted white, as were the timber floorboards and ceiling beams. Architect Ignacio Reigada describes this as a “necessary luminosity” that results in “a neutral volume – white, bright [and] airy”.

A Coruna by Sinaldaba

An entrance corridor, bathroom and small study space separate the bedroom from the living and dining area.

A Coruna by Sinaldaba

Bare lightbulbs and recycled furniture complete the interior. “The furniture is all recycled. We saw it in other apartments of this building, that still aren’t restored, so we decided to include it in the project,” added Reigada.

A Coruna by Sinaldaba

Other Spanish apartments we’ve featured include a seaside home with an all-white interior and an apartment with mosaic floors and a decorative ceilingSee more Spanish architecture and design »

A Coruna by Sinaldaba

Photography is by Abraham Viqueira.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


A Coruña

A top floor in a late nineteenth century building, located one of the central streets of A Coruña, in conditions very unfavourable maintenance, on a shoestring budget but with total freedom and trust from the client to choose the solutions, have us believe appropriate.

A Coruna by Sinaldaba
Previous floor plan – click for larger image

The house has the classic spatial configuration of a Gothic story plot: elongated, narrow, narrow, multi confined spaces? Is that what we all wanted? Quite the opposite. We proposed to completely empty the floor early on, keeping only the main stairwell. We got a single space, open, broad, bounded by a strip that houses furniture-kitchen-toilet-cabinet-study, i.e. a longitudinal continuous section running along the floor and containing all needs, freeing the volume and providing a spatial and visual continuity to housing.

A Coruna by Sinaldaba
New floor plan – click for larger image

The solutions adopted for the realisation of the idea happen to be fully reversible. We basically reinforced all beams that needed it with metallic elements, fir wood is used for the longitudinal strip and to repair the core of stairs. Both the stone walls and floors and ceilings are painted white, providing a necessary luminosity, as it is also the cheapest option. The result is a neutral volume, white, bright, airy, acting as a container for a small wooden box for communications and other longitudinal collecting the necessary elements to inhabit.

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Estudio de Arquitectura
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A Cantina by Estudio Nômada

The tree-like sculptures growing out of the tables in this canteen by Spanish architects Estudio Nômada are meant to remind diners of eating outdoors.

A Cantina by Estudio Nômada

The studio drew on the culture and traditions of Galicia in north-west Spain to design the museum shop and canteen for Peter Eisenman’s Cidade da Cultura de Galicia.

A Cantina by Estudio Nômada

The legs of the dining tables in the canteen area extend upwards to form stylised trees, which have an aluminium frame beneath the oak exterior and can incorporate additional lighting.

A Cantina by Estudio Nômada

“The idea behind the trees was to evoke, through a contemporary language, the gatherings of people during rural summer festivities,” Enrique de Santiago of Estudio Nômada told Dezeen. “To shelter from the sun these types of celebrations take place under the trees’ shade along long tables, so we designed the tables by elongating their feet into branches.”

Site plan – click above for larger image

The museum shop next door features tall wooden shelving that can be adjusted to accommodate all potential products on sale. The two spaces are linked by apertures carved into the dividing wall and unified by a long counter tiled in the architects’ interpretation of “rural Galician façades along the coastline, like for example the tiled façades at the village of Corrubedo.”

A Cantina by Estudio Nomada

Floor plan – click above for larger image

Completed in 2010, the Cidade da Cultura de Galicia incorporates a museum, library, archive facility, arts centre and performing arts centre, surrounded by 25 hectares of parkland. You can read our earlier story about the Cidade da Cultura de Galicia here.

Diagram of tree construction – click above for larger image

Photographs are by Santos-Diez/BISimages

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Estudio Nômada
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